We are currently looking at the following theories:
I am currently double checking if the hierarchically higher theories merely allow for the construction of a bigger model Vκ, just like ZFC+inacc, or if they do something more than that.ChatGPT: Theories in the ZFC consistency hierarchy
The ZFC consistency hierarchy refers to a ranking of formal theories based on their consistency strength, often determined by the existence of large cardinals. This hierarchy is not linear, but certain well-known theories are commonly placed in a rough order. Each theory proves the consistency of the weaker ones below it, assuming its own consistency.
Here’s a simplified version of the consistency hierarchy starting from ZFC:
Base Level
PA (Peano Arithmetic)
Consistency strength: relatively weak.
Cannot prove the consistency of ZFC.
ZFC (Zermelo-Fraenkel Set Theory with Choice)
The standard foundation of modern mathematics.
Assumes no large cardinals.
ZFC + Large Cardinal Axioms
Each step below includes a large cardinal assumption that cannot be proved in ZFC, but implies ZFC's consistency:
Increasing Consistency Strength:
ZFC + “There exists an inaccessible cardinal”
First step beyond ZFC.
Needed to construct models of ZFC.
ZFC + “There exists a Mahlo cardinal”
Stronger reflection properties.
ZFC + “There exists a weakly compact cardinal”
Stronger than Mahlo.
ZFC + “There exists a measurable cardinal”
Very strong; implies existence of non-principal ultrafilters closed under countable intersections.
ZFC + “There exists a strong cardinal”
ZFC + “There exists a supercompact cardinal”
ZFC + “There exists a huge cardinal”
Beyond Large Cardinals
ZFC + “There exists a Woodin cardinal”
Important for determinacy and descriptive set theory.
ZFC + Projective Determinacy (PD)
Implies existence of many Woodin cardinals.
Not provable in ZFC.
ZFC + AD (Axiom of Determinacy) in L(ℝ)
Incompatible with AC (Axiom of Choice), but useful in inner model theory.
Theories Beyond ZFC in Strength but Not Just by Cardinals
ZFC + “V = L” (constructible universe)
Not stronger than ZFC in consistency but has implications on cardinal structure.
ZF + DC + AD (in place of AC)
Used in descriptive set theory.
MK (Morse–Kelley set theory)
Stronger than ZFC, allows class comprehension.
ZFC + Forcing Axioms
e.g. Martin’s Maximum (MM), Proper Forcing Axiom (PFA)
Usually require the existence of supercompact cardinals.
Summary Table (simplified):
Theory Notes
PA Arithmetic base
ZFC Standard set theory
ZFC + Inaccessible Models ZFC
ZFC + Mahlo Reflection principles
ZFC + Measurable Large cardinals begin
ZFC + Supercompact Huge structure strength
ZFC + Woodin Descriptive set theory
ZFC + PD Implies many Woodins
ZFC + AD (L(ℝ)) Incompatible with AC
MK Includes proper classes
ZFC + PFA/MM High consistency strength
Would you like a graphical diagram or explanation of how certain large cardinals correspond to inner models like L, L[μ], or L(R)?
You see, this hierarchy operates on a very basic principle. if a theory provides a κ cardinal that is unreachable in ZFC, it can provide the domain for a model that is closed under set operations in ZFC. This domain won't be closed in the theory that provides κ, but that does not matter, because you are trying to prove the consistency of ZFC and not of that stronger theory.
Theories are essential in math. They are not a 'complete waste of time' for someone who actually likes math. If you are not interested in the consistency of ZFC, then why are you even replying in this post?